Sterilizing tunnel for pharmaceutical containers

ABSTRACT

A sterilizing tunnel ( 10; 10   a ) for pharmaceutical containers ( 1 ) has an entry zone ( 11 ), a heating zone ( 12 ), and two cooling zones ( 13, 14 ). The individual zones contain ventilating fan units ( 22, 23, 24 ) that generate air currents, which serve to heat and cool the containers ( 1 ) that a transport apparatus ( 17 ) conveys through the sterilizing tunnel ( 10; 10   a ). The invention proposes that the heating and cooling units, which operate using the principle of heated and cooled air flows, be supplemented with radiant heat-generating heating units ( 35, 36, 37, 40 ). The sterilizing tunnel ( 10; 10   a ) according to the invention makes it possible to achieve a uniform heating and cooling of the containers ( 1 ), preventing stress cracks in the containers ( 1 ) and permitting intentional heating that makes it possible, for example, for the containers ( 1 ) to be coated with a substance.

PRIOR ART

[0001] The invention relates to a sterilizing tunnel for pharmaceutical containers as generically defined by the preamble to claim 1, of the type that is known from DE 198 46 277 C2. Sterilizing tunnels of this kind, which are used in the pharmaceutical industry, particularly for sterilizing ampules, vials, or the like, have ventilating fans in the individual zones along which the containers are conveyed, which produce an air flow that circulates around the containers in a laminar fashion from top toward the bottom. Depending on the zone, the circulated air is scrubbed by means of clean air filters (so-called HEPA filters) disposed above the containers and is heated and cooled by means of heating and cooling units. Due to the flow direction of the air, the heating and cooling of the containers occurs from the direction of the container mouth toward the container bottom, i.e. unevenly over the height of the container, which can damage the containers or produce stress cracks in them, particularly in relatively thin containers or when a container has walls of different thicknesses.

[0002] It is also known to coat the containers with emulsion-like substances (e.g. silicone) before entry into the sterilizing tunnel. In this case, the sterilizing tunnel is also used for fixing and baking the substance into the surface of the containers. In the sterilizing tunnels of the prior art in which hot air is circulated through filters, the filters can become clogged with baking residues of the substances, consequently reducing the service life of these filters.

[0003] There are also known sterilizing tunnels whose heating units are operated solely by means of radiant heat generators (e.g. infrared radiators).

ADVANTAGES OF THE INVENTION

[0004] The sterilizing tunnel for pharmaceutical containers according to the invention, with the characterizing features of claim 1, has the advantage over the prior art that the containers are thermally treated in a particularly gentle way so that the probability of stress cracks is reduced. This is achieved according to the invention through the additional use of radiant heat-generating heating units that act on the container bottoms so that in concert with the hot air from the ventilating fan units, it is possible to produce a uniform heating of the containers over their entire height.

[0005] Other advantageous modifications of the sterilizing tunnel for pharmaceutical containers according to the invention are disclosed in the dependent claims.

[0006] In order to improve the action of the radiant heat on the container bottoms, it is advantageous for the transport apparatus on which the containers are conveyed to be embodied in the form of a radiation-permeable wire mesh belt.

[0007] If the sterilizing tunnel is also intended to be used for coating and baking-on emulsion-like substances, then the invention provides for the use of heating units that generate additional radiant heat in the heating zone, which units are disposed above and/or to the side of the containers. As a result, the coating and baking-on process is at least for the most part already finished by the next time hot air is circulated around the containers, thus reducing the percentage of baking residues in the air that is circulated through the filters.

[0008] In order to reduce the susceptibility of the containers to stress cracks, it is likewise advantageous to also provide radiant heat-generating heating units in the cooling zone, at least above the container mouths.

DRAWINGS

[0009] Two exemplary embodiments of the invention are shown in the drawings and will be explained in detail below.

[0010]FIG. 1 shows a simplified longitudinal section through a first sterilizing tunnel according to the invention,

[0011]FIG. 2 shows a partial section in the plane II-II of FIG. 1 during operation of the first sterilizing tunnel,

[0012]FIG. 3 shows a simplified longitudinal section through a second sterilizing tunnel according to the invention, and

[0013]FIG. 4 shows a partial section in the plane IV-IV of FIG. 3 during operation of the second sterilizing tunnel.

DESCRIPTION OF THE EXEMPLARY EMBODIMENTS

[0014] The first sterilizing tunnel 10 according to the invention schematically depicted in FIG. 1 is essentially comprised of an entry zone 11, a heating zone 12, and two cooling zones 13, 14. Pharmaceutical containers 1 such as ampules, vials, or the like, which come from a cleaning machine, not shown, are supplied into the sterilizing tunnel 10 from the entry zone 11 and leave the tunnel at its opposite end 15 after the cooling zone 14, in order to then be further processed in the subsequent filling and closing machines, which are not shown.

[0015] A horizontal, preferably continuously driven, endless conveyor belt 17 serves to transport the containers 1 through the individual zones inside the sterilizing tunnel 10. Preferably, the conveyor belt 17 is embodied as an air-permeable wire mesh belt made of stainless steel.

[0016] Large-area filter elements 18, 19, and 20 are disposed above the conveyor belt 17 in the different zones of the sterilizing tunnel 10. The filter elements 18, 19, and 20 cooperate with ventilating fan units 22, 23, and 24, which are each associated with a respective zone and each serve to circulate the air in a respectively closed circuit. The air flows generated by the ventilating fan units 22, 23, and 24, which circulate in the form of so-called laminar flow currents (flow arrows 25) around the containers 1 essentially from top to bottom during their transport through the sterilizing tunnel 10, are temperature-controlled by means of heating and cooling units that are not shown. To that end, temperature sensors are placed in the individual zones, which supply the measured temperatures as input values to the control unit of the sterilizing tunnel 10. The control unit then appropriately regulates the heating and cooling units, and is assisted by inlet and outlet air flaps, not shown, that are also disposed in the zones, which additionally serve to compensate for leakage and overflow losses. Furthermore, vertically adjustable sluices 26, 27, and 28, whose position is adapted to the respective container height, are positioned both between zones and within zones in order to reduce the above-mentioned overflow losses between the individual zones.

[0017] The air flows generated by the ventilating fan units 22, 23, and 24, which circulate around the containers 1 from above, i.e. from the container mouth 2 toward the container bottom 3, result in an uneven temperature distribution over the height of the containers. As a result, the container mouths 2 have a higher temperature than the container bottoms 3 as they pass through the heating zone 12. This is because the hot air in the heating zone 12 comes into contact with the container mouth 2 first.

[0018] The sterilizing tunnel 10 is particularly designed to permit deliberate influence to be exerted on the temperature distribution along the height of the containers 1 in order to thus prevent thermal stresses that can damage the containers 1 and is also designed to permit favorable influence to be exerted on the baking of emulsion-like particles into the inner walls of the containers. In order to accomplish this, the heating zone 12 is divided into two regions 33 and 34 by means of a dividing wall 31, whose end oriented toward the conveyor belt 17 is embodied as a vertically adjustable intermediary way 32. In the one region 33, the ventilating fan unit 22 provides a heated air flow, whereas the other region 34 situated on the side oriented toward the entry zone 11 is provided with a number of radiant heat-generating heating units 35, 36, 37.

[0019] The heating units 36, 36, 37, which are in particular embodied in the form of infrared radiators and in the exemplary embodiment are embodied as rod-shaped, are disposed underneath the radiation-permeable conveyor belt 17 close to the container bottoms 3, above the conveyor belt 17 close to the container mouths 2, and if need be, beside the conveyor belt 17 at the same height as the container mouths 2 outside of stationary or mobile lateral guides 38 for the conveyor belt 17; in the exemplary embodiment, the heating units 35, 36 extend lateral to the travel direction of the containers 1 through the sterilizing tunnel 10 and the heating units 37 extend along this travel direction. Furthermore, in the region 34, there is also at least one temperature sensor 39, which is coupled to the control unit of the sterilizing tunnel 10.

[0020] Depending on the intended use, the heating units 35, 36, 37 make it possible to provide an intentionally more intense preheating of particular container regions, for example the container bottoms 3, in order to prevent thermal stresses in the containers 1 in the subsequent further heating by means of the air flow in region 33. In this instance, the heating units 35 oriented toward the container bottoms 3 are set to a higher temperature than the other heating units 36, 37.

[0021] By contrast, if an emulsion-like substance (e.g. silicone), which is used to coat the container 1, should already be baked-on in the region 34 so that possible baking residues place as little subsequent strain as possible on the filter element 18 in the region 33, then the radiant heat of the heating units 35, 36, 37 can also be set very aggressively, i.e. a temperature inside the containers 1, which is required for coating them, is reached within an extremely short period of time and is then reduced again if need be in the region 33.

[0022] By contrast with the sterilizing tunnel 10, in the second sterilizing tunnel 10 a shown in FIGS. 3 and 4, the heating zone 12 is only provided with additional heating units 35 underneath the radiation-permeable conveyor belt 17 and with heating units 37 disposed to the side, outside the lateral guides 38 in a manner analogous to the sterilizing tunnel 10, but no radiant heat-generating heating units are provided above the containers 1. Instead, the containers 1 are heated with hot air from above by means of the ventilating fan unit 22 in the entire heating zone 12, from which it also follows that the sterilizing tunnel 10 a does not contain a dividing wall 31 of the type provided in the sterilizing tunnel 10 that divides the heating zone 12 into different regions.

[0023] In addition, in the sterilizing tunnel 10 a, the first cooling zone 13 is provided with additional heating units 40, 41, which also generate radiant heat. These heating units 40, 41, which are also rod-shaped, are provided above the container mouths 2 on the side oriented toward the heating zone 12, as well as laterally, outside the lateral guides 38, at the same height as the container mouths 2, and are controlled by means of a temperature sensor, not shown, which is disposed in the cooling zone 13 close to the heating units 40 and is coupled to the control unit of the sterilizing tunnel 10.

[0024] The heating units 40, 41 make it possible for the containers 1, which are transferred out of the heating zone 12 and have a relatively high temperature, to be cooled down somewhat less rapidly in the vicinity of their container mouths 2, thus permitting a more uniform cooling of the containers 1 on the whole. The arrangement of additional heating units 35, 37, 40, 41 embodied in the sterilizing tunnel 10 a consequently makes it possible to achieve a heating and cooling of the containers 1 that is gentle to the material in order to avoid thermal stresses and prevent heat cracks in the containers 1.

[0025] The two sterilizing tunnels 10, 10 a according to the invention can be modified in numerous ways without going beyond essence of the invention, which is comprised of providing additional radiant heat-generating heating units in the sterilizing tunnel 10, which in cooperation with air flows generated by the ventilation fan units, produce a uniform heating and uniform cooling of the containers 1. It is therefore conceivable, for example, to omit the heating units 36, 37 at the top and at the sides. Furthermore, the sterilizing tunnel 10 can also have the heating units 40, 41 disposed in the cooling zone 13 of the sterilizing tunnel 10 a, in order to treat the containers 1 in a particularly gentle fashion with regard to thermal stresses. 

1. A sterilizing tunnel (10; 10 a) for pharmaceutical containers (1), with a transport apparatus (17) that conveys the containers (1) along a heating zone (12) and at least one cooling zone (13, 14), and with ventilating fan units (22, 23, 24) for generating air currents that circulate around the containers (1) in the heating zone (12) and the at least one cooling zone (13, 14), characterized in that at least in the region of the heating zone (12), in addition to the ventilating fan unit (22), at least one radiant heat-generating heating unit (35) is provided, which acts on the container bottoms (3).
 2. The sterilizing tunnel according to claim 1, characterized in that the at least one heating unit (35) is disposed on the side oriented toward an entry zone (11) of the heating zone (12).
 3. The sterilizing tunnel according to claim 1 or 2, characterized in that the transport apparatus (17) is embodied as a radiation-permeable wire mesh belt and that the at least one heating unit (35) is disposed on the side of the transport apparatus (17) opposite from the containers (1).
 4. The sterilizing tunnel according to one of claims 1 to 3, characterized in that the at least one heating unit (35) in the heating zone (12) is disposed in a first region (34) that is separated by means of a dividing wall (31) from a second region (33) in which the ventilating fan unit (22) acts on the containers (1).
 5. The sterilizing tunnel according to claim 4, characterized in that additional radiant heat-generating heating units (36, 37) are disposed in the first region (34) above and to the side of the containers (1).
 6. The sterilizing tunnel according to one of claims 1 to 5, characterized in that at least one additional radiant heat-generating heating unit (40) is also disposed in the region of the cooling zone (13, 14), on the side oriented toward the heating zone (12).
 7. The sterilizing tunnel according to claim 6, characterized in that at least one additional heating unit (40) is disposed above the containers (1).
 8. The sterilizing tunnel according to one of claims 1 to 7, characterized in that a temperature sensor (39) is disposed in the vicinity of the at least one heating unit (35) and cooperates with the control unit of the sterilizing tunnel (10). 